Difference between revisions of "Entity Component System"

From RogueBasin
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (Flagged broken link for repair or removal.)
(Link to archive)
Line 9: Line 9:
* Good overview and links on Stack Overflow: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1901251/component-based-game-engine-design
* Good overview and links on Stack Overflow: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1901251/component-based-game-engine-design


* [http://altdevblogaday.com/2011/10/08/a-handful-of-components/ A Handful of Components], descriptions of some useful components by Michael A. Carr-Robb-John (Broken Link)
* [http://web.archive.org/web/20140719094839/http://www.altdev.co/2011/10/08/a-handful-of-components/ A Handful of Components], descriptions of some useful components by Michael A. Carr-Robb-John


* [http://entity-systems.wikidot.com/ Entity Systems Project], an entity component system wiki
* [http://entity-systems.wikidot.com/ Entity Systems Project], an entity component system wiki

Revision as of 22:31, 18 December 2014

An entity component system is a way to implement your game objects so that you can build their functionality through composition instead of object-oriented inheritance. The prevailing wisdom in current game development seems to be that complex games should have one of those instead of an inheritance-based object system that is likely to lead to unmaintainable blobs of a class. A roguelike is probably a complex enough game that you should use an entity component system in one.

The basic idea is that game objects at their core are just unique identifiers (UIDs), plain strings or integers, instead of complex objects. The complex data and functionality is moved into multiple components, which are stored in their own containers and associated with the object UIDs.

This makes it easy to have data-driven object construction and allows very diverse combinations of component loadouts in objects that still coexist in the same game world as the same fundamental type of program object.

References